It depends a bit on the price of course.
The "liquid cooling" makes me suspect it's from iBuypower, Cyberpower, or etc., which means that the price should be reasonable. It's not, of course, capable at playing GW2 at "max", but it's comfortably close.
You didn't mention the power supply - get a good power supply, not the "standard" power supply (if you can afford it).

I would recommend actually building it on the iBuyPower website, so that you can choose your own components. And we can certainly help you. The price should be about the same.

As Quaker was getting at, you want to know you're getting a decent power supply—at least who made it. If it doesn't say anything beyond its alleged wattage, its probably garbage. Their online system builder site has several from Corsair and XFX, you'd be fine with a ~500-600 W unit from either.

With NORUSH Coupon Code it comes to $861.85 after a couple of small rebates. Shipping is on top of that, but will vary depending on your location. It's a very good gaming computer and will burn through almost every game on the market at that resolution. It also whips the one from TigerDirect... by allot.

*also has a free CM Storm Xornet mouse, which may suit your needs - if not - EBay it. [/font]

Never get the corsair or major brand memory (you allways get) major/no name brand it's the cheapest shit they can have made for them and usally is the first thing to fail unless you get their standard power supply.

Never get the corsair or major brand memory (you allways get) major/no name brand it's the cheapest shit they can have made for them and usally is the first thing to fail unless you get their standard power supply.

I still have my last PC, a decade-old AMD 64 ibuypower system with its original, and cheap, PSU and RAM which are still in working condition. My parents use it now, but I gamed hard on it for years and didn't even treat it very well. Of course I use better hardware now that I know better.

I know this is a meaningless anecdote, but my point is that hardware failure is definitely not a "usual" outcome, even with shitty components. You still have to get unlucky. Its more a matter of the risk of not having a reliable warranty to back you up.

I run GW2 at max on my 1280 x 1024 screen and I get close to 60 fps under normal circumstances on this system

CPU: i3-2120
GFX: HD7750
Ram: 4 GB
PSU: 450W

I have a power measurerer installed, and the computer draws around 150W when it is maxed out. I think people tend to think they need way more computing power and electrical power than they really do. Partly because they are influenced by commercials, forums and friends, partly because they can't always measure things for themselves.

I run GW2 at max on my 1280 x 720 screen and I get close to 60 fps under normal circumstances on this system

CPU: i3-2120
GFX: HD7750
Ram: 4 GB
PSU: 450W

I have a power measurerer installed, and the computer draws around 150W when it is maxed out. I think people tend to think they need way more computing power and electrical power than they really do. Partly because they are influenced by commercials, forums and friends, partly because they can't always measure things for themselves.

IMHO, you could do with somewhat less than the proposed system.

This made me LOL by max you do mean EVERY option turned all the way up as that is maxed. People still have 720p monitors? Please post a PIC of your 60FPS in a large event or WVW, or for that mater just standing still in LA.
My PC i5 2500k @ 4.4Ghz, 6970 GPU @ 950/1425, 16GB 2133 ram, 2 SSD's 1 HDD pulls 326 Watts from the wall as per the Kill-A-Watt meter so yes I know exactly how to measure things. 326 X .86 (this is my PSU efficieny) = 280Watts actually being used the sweet spot of power supplies is 60/70 % so by what you are saying a 450 Watt PSU would be pleanty for my PC? The 326 Watts was when running this game. Running a full system stress test i'm very close to 450 Watts so using 66%or so of my power supply now I need 600 Watts.

I still have my last PC, a decade-old AMD 64 ibuypower system with its original, and cheap, PSU and RAM which are still in working condition. My parents use it now, but I gamed hard on it for years and didn't even treat it very well. Of course I use better hardware now that I know better.

I know this is a meaningless anecdote, but my point is that hardware failure is definitely not a "usual" outcome, even with shitty components. You still have to get unlucky. Its more a matter of the risk of not having a reliable warranty to back you up.

Make up your mind this is from your first post.
As Quaker was getting at, you want to know you're getting a decent power supply—at least who made it. If it doesn't say anything beyond its alleged wattage, its probably garbage. Their online system builder site has several from Corsair and XFX, you'd be fine with a ~500-600 W unit from either.
Look on their fourms the main complaint is the PSU and memory if you get thier standard junk. I've replaced alot of them that have failed.

I think the liquid cooling is overkill for this system. Not that I'm an expert, but having just built a new machine late last summer. I personally think liquid cooling should only be necessary for extreme overclocking or multiple graphics cards. But that's just my inexpert opinion. Should perform quite well with GW2 however.

I was not suggesting that its a good decision to buy poor-quality hardware, all I said was that you still have to be unlucky for any hardware to fail, which is true and an important point to clarify for the OP once the subject came up. As you just pointed out, I did and still do strongly recommend buying good quality components—but that's not because the rest "usually" fail.

I would suggest the I5-2500K Series to cut down on costs, Throw in 4GB of ram(Single Stick), and either a HD7770, or a Nvidia 550. That will cut your current build down by 300-400.

if you were to build it yourself, you could cut down another 100 or so.

Use Sources like Newegg.com, Tigerdirect.com and if your lucky to have a frys electronics near you, frys.com.

*Just do NOT buy returned discounted Items from Frys, these have an orange lable on them, always buy new Unopened items*

You do not need watercooling, so just stick with the default cooler, you will probably want a 650-800Watt PSU, but something named branded. not all Power Supples are equal. I have used Coolermaster PSUs for 5+ years and never had an issue with them so I would suggest that brand.

For Memory, G.Skill is awesome. its all I run at home now. 49.99 for 16Gigs (4x4GB Sticks) from a friday newegg Deal, and they have been rock solid for over a year.